Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


US Adopts Limits on Clean Water Law Enforcement
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

US: June 6, 2007


WASHINGTON - The landmark US law to fight water pollution will now apply only to bodies of water large enough for boats to use, and their adjacent wetlands, and will not automatically protect streams, the US government said on Tuesday.


Environmental groups said they fear the new policy will muddy the purpose of the federal Clean Water Act and put many smaller bodies of water at risk. Democrats in Congress have introduced legislation mandating protection of creeks, estuaries and other watersheds.

The Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers wrote the new guidelines after the Supreme Court split a year ago in a case about which waters fall under the Clean Water Act.

Because of the split decision, lower courts must decide on a case-by-case basis if the law applies to smaller water areas.

Four justices said the law was restricted to protecting navigable waters such as lakes and rivers, and bodies connected to them, while four argued the law had a broader reach.

The new guidelines were intended to help workers in the field determine if a waterway fell under the act, using the argument of Justice Anthony Kennedy, who did not join either side in the decision.

Benjamin Grumbles, EPA's assistant administrator for water, told reporters during a conference the new guidelines would provide greater consistency and predictability for the public.

Now his agency will regulate waters large enough to be used by boats that transport commerce, along with wetlands adjacent to them. It will decide on a case-by-case basis to regulate other tributaries that may affect main waterways.

"In effect, the EPA and the Corps are taking their field staff and the public out to the woods, blindfolding them, spinning them in circles, telling them to 'go west,' and calling that guidance," complained Jon Devine, a senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

The EPA's new policy does not offer clear instructions to scientists in the field on how to protect surface waters, Devine said, and would eliminate protections for many streams. He also said the case-by-case decisions would inspire an onslaught of lawsuits and public confusion.

John Woodley, Assistant Secretary of the Army, said there would be no way to measure changes from the guidance.

But, he said, the waterways in the Supreme Court case would have been considered wetlands according to EPA's new guidance.

Angered by the Supreme Court's split, Democratic lawmakers last month introduced the "Clean Water Restoration Act" that would drop the word "navigable" from the original law.

Rep. James Oberstar, a Minnesota Democrat sponsoring the legislation, said the single edit would make clear that the EPA must also protect watersheds, which are often creeks or estuaries where water has collected.


Story by Lisa Lambert


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
6 JUN 2007
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

AUSTRALIA:
Tree Planting, Worm Farming on World Environment Day

BANGLADESH:
Climate Change to Hit Bangladesh Food Output - Experts

BELGIUM:
EU Considers Auctioning 100 Pct of CO2 Permits

BELGIUM:
More EU States Wary on GMO Maize, Debate Hots Up

BHUTAN:
Mines Destroy Bhutan's Mountains, Affect India

BRAZIL:
Brazil Must Improve G8 Climate Proposal - Activists

CANADA:
Airlines Seek to Escape Climate-Change Dog House

CHINA:
China's Top Power Plant Seen Ready Ahead of Time

CHINA:
Wife of Chinese Green Activist Targets Watchdog

CHINA:
China's Pollution Tide Rises But More Slowly

CHINA:
G8 Must Forge Concrete Climate Change Plan - Annan

CHINA:
Drought Hits Nearly 4 Million in Chinese Province

CHINA:
Endangered China Ibises Lose Taste For Wild Life

GERMANY:
US Adviser Sees Way Ahead on Post-Kyoto Framework

GERMANY:
Japan, EU Call for 50 Pct Reduction in Emissions

GERMANY:
Fortis, UN Ink Deal on Financing "Green" Projects

GREECE:
Earthquake Rattles Central Greece, No Injuries

INDONESIA:
Indonesia to Return Rare Kangaroos to Papua Forests

INTERNATIONAL:
Melting Ice: World Environment Day's Hot Topic

ITALY:
Biofuel Can Help Poor as Well as Climate - FAO

MEXICO:
Lion, Tiger Kill Man at Mexican Meat Plant

NETHERLANDS:
Ebay to Ban Global Ivory Trade on its Sites

NETHERLANDS:
Illegal Ivory Imports Flourish In US - Report

NORWAY:
Global Warming May be Good for Greenland

NORWAY:
Worries About Global Warming are Growing - Survey

NORWAY:
Financial Firms Urge G8 to Combat Global Warming

UK:
World Warmer Than Average in Year to May - UK

UK:
UK Firms Seek to Curb Formula One C02 Emissions

UK:
Climate Policies Can't Hurt Us - OPEC

UK:
CO2 Cost Will Make China Curb Emissions - IEA

UK:
Bush Must Join in Global Climate Fight - IEA

UNITED ARAB EMIRATES:
Mideast Cyclone Reaches Oman

US:
US Adopts Limits on Clean Water Law Enforcement

US:
Coke Vows to Reduce Water Used in Drink Production

US:
Honda to Discontinue Accord Hybrid Sedan

US:
Wind to Make 20 Pct of US Power by 2030 - Advocates



previous day
today's news
next day